Sierra Leone Is Ebola-Free At Last & It's Been A Long, Tragic Road

A report by the World Health Organization declared the West African country of Sierra Leone free of Ebola transmissions on Saturday, stating that no new cases had been discovered in the past 42 days. That equates to two full incubation periods, which is the required waiting period for a country to be declared Ebola-free. The good news follows two full years of tragedy after the disease began spreading in late 2013, ravaging Sierra Leone’s remote districts and leaving much of the country’s economy in shambles. According to the WHO, officials would be moving forward cautiously but keeping an eye on any potential flare-ups.

“The World Health Organization commends the Government of Sierra Leone and her people on achieving this significant milestone in the country’s fight against Ebola,” WHO officials said in a press release on Saturday. “Sierra Leone achieved this milestone through tremendous hard work and commitment while battling the most unprecedented Ebola virus disease outbreak in human history.”

Sierra Leone will be under the microscope for the next 90 days as the government keeps tabs on any potential cases, but the outlook is positive, WHO officials explained. “This new phase is critical for ensuring early detection of any possible new cases of Ebola virus disease,” they wrote. “[...] WHO will maintain an enhanced staff presence in Sierra Leone during this transition from outbreak control, to enhanced vigilance, to the recovery of essential health services.”

The 2014 Ebola outbreak has crippled various parts of West Africa since the first reported case in December 2013. According to officials, the root of the outbreak itself could be traced back to one young boy living in the Guinean village of Meliandou.

Two-year-old Emile Ouamouno first contracted the disease in late December, suffering from bouts of fever, vomiting, and bloody stool before finally succumbing. Reports later showed that the boy’s mother Sia, who was pregnant at the time, and 3-year-old sister Philomene both died within days as well.

“We thought it was a mysterious disease,” Dr. Kalissa N’fansoumane, director of the nearby Guéckédou Hospital which treated many of the region’s Ebola patients, told The New York Times in December 2014.

It wasn’t until 12 weeks after Emile’s death that WHO and local health officials were able to diagnose the disease as Ebola. Unfortunately, the diagnosis came too late.

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The rapid spread of the virus in the weeks following Emile’s case was monumental: According to WHO numbers, within two months, 26 people across Guinea had perished, with thousands more to come.

The rate at which the total number of deaths began stacking up was shocking to WHO officials, given that Ebola itself is generally not easy to transmit. Some, however, noted that regional burial practices may have helped speed the transmissions along.

“There's this ritual behavior [in some areas, where] they wash bodies by hand to prepare for burial — a loving way of sending the spirit into the next world,” explained Ian Lipkin, a distinguished professor of epidemiology at Columbia University, in an interview with National Geographic in March 2014, just as the epidemic was beginning to heat up. “This kind of behavior brings people into very close contact with body fluids that are infected, and that's how people become infected.”

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Within a year of the initial outbreak, WHO officials announced that at least 26,000 had been affected by the disease, the deadliest epidemic since it was first discovered in 1976. The outbreak continued to spread unabated for another full year.

The world had never faced an Ebola outbreak of this scale and magnitude and the world has neither seen a nation mobilizing its people and resources as Sierra Leone did. The power of the people of Sierra Leone is the reason why we could put an end to this outbreak today … We now have a unique opportunity to support Sierra Leone to build a strong and resilient public health system ready to detect and respond to the next outbreak of disease, or any other public health threat.